Showing posts with label Oscars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oscars. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Entertainment Award Shows - An Idea whose Time is Done?

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When we open the envelope and announce the winner why is it the entertainer has to become a politician, a special interest advocate, or try to create personal attention for their own career?  If they choose the latter, it is usually through the use of provocative techniques.


Whatever the point, they are constantly driving down the number of people watching the shows and a trend that started a decade ago seems to be well established.


Why are winners not able to be humble and thank their fans and those helping them in their career?  The last thing anyone wants to hear is some millionaire entertainer telling us what is in our best interests, or what is wrong with the world we live in.


If I want to watch a political sideshow, there are much better, and more informed sources than the singer or actor who spends most of their life living other people's lives on screen or stage.  Political rants come from all types on the award shows and the hypocritical speeches often are lost in the reputation and actions of the speaker.


Note to nominees - you are not me, you are an entertainer.  Stick to entertaining, that gives you the big bucks to stand on your soapbox and preach to the masses.  A handful of entertainers actually do spend some time the rest of the year helping legitimate causes but they are few and far between.


Here is what the news media has to say about the award show ratings this past year.





Grammys Ratings Woes Worse Than They Appear: A Bad Sign for Oscars?





TV Ratings: Grammy Awards Hit All-Time Low in Key Demo








Sharp drop in ratings for Grammy Awards this year
The television audience for Bruno Mars' dominating night at the Grammy Awards was a sparser one than music's big night has seen for nearly a decade, and a steep decline of 24 percent from the program a year earlier.

The Nielsen company estimated Monday that 19.8 million people watched the Grammys, compared to 26.1 million last year. It was the Grammys' smallest audience since 19 million watched in 2009.
The viewership decline was notable compared to other awards shows recently. The most recent Golden Globes and Oscars telecasts were down 4 percent from the previous year, while last September's Emmys viewership was roughly the same as the year before, Nielsen said.
Grammy viewership has generally been between 20 and 30 million this past decade, from a high of 39.9 million people who watched in 2012, when the awards took place shortly after Whitney Houston's death.
TV Ratings: Oscars Drop to 32.9M Viewers, Telecast Takes a Bigger Hit With Younger Set
After initial indicators had Sunday's lengthy show off from 2016, time-zone adjusted tallies give this year's Oscars an average 32.9 million viewers. That marks a 4 percent drop in viewership from the prior. Early stats had the show averaging an overnight 22.4 rating among metered market households. (Last year's outing saw its overnight score, a 23.4 rating, ultimately translate to 34.4 million viewers.) In the key demo of adults 18-49, this year's show averaged a 9.1 rating — off a more dramatic 14 percent from the 2016 telecast, which averaged a 10.5 rating among the advertiser-favored viewers.


NBC's telecast of Golden Globe Awards draws 19 million viewers, down 5% from last year
On a night when politics nearly overshadowed show business, NBC's telecast of Golden Globes Awards was watched by 19 million viewers on Sunday, a 5% decline from 2017.

But this year's show saw an 11% year-to-year decline in the 18-to-49 age group that advertisers covet most.




Emmys ratings sink to all-time low of 11.3 million viewers

The show, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel for ABC, fell 5% from last year’s broadcast and 22% in the key demo of adults aged 18-49.







The 2018 Grammy Awards Was a Tone-Deaf, Out-of-Touch Mess

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Wednesday, March 01, 2017

Trump did not mention ratings but we will -

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Here’s the FINAL Nielsen ratings on Trump’s address to Congress last night

Mar. 1, 2017 7:12 pmThe Right Scoop  

Trump’s speech has climbed another 4 million from earlier numbers today, putting him within 5 million of Obama’s address to Congress in 2009:

VARIETY – According to Nielsen’s final official tally, Trump’s speech drew 47.74 million viewers from approximately 9 to 10:15 p.m. across 11 networks. Those 11 networks counted by Nielsen were ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, Univision, PBS, CNN, Fox Business Network, Fox News Channel, MSNBC, and NBC Universo.

President Obama’s first address pulled in an audience of 52.37 million people across the four broadcast networks, Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC, Telemundo, and Univision — a difference of about 9%. The audience for President George W. Bush’s first address, at 39.79 million, was overshadowed by the State of the Union Address he delivered in 2003, which brought in 62.06 million viewers.


Trump Address TROUNCES the Oscars in ratings…

MAR. 1, 2017 3:52 PM  THE RIGHT SCOOP 



Trump’s Address last night did very well in the ratings, topping last week’s Oscars by 11 million viewers:
Ratings are in. 
Trump got 47.74 million viewers.
Oscars: 32.9 million.
— Kyle Smith (@rkylesmith) March 1, 2017

Monday, February 27, 2017

The Oscar Recap - Oscar Blew it! - Coltons Point Times picks 17 of 24 winners! Oops Fake News just changed the Movie of the Year - the Games continue!

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In case you missed the Big Show the Coltons Point Times picked 17 of the 24 winners of the 89th Academy Awards.  I thought a 71% winning record was pretty good but after the La La Land crew went on stage and accepted the Best Picture Oscar the Academy belatedly interrupted the celebration by La La Land people and said La La Land did not win, but Moonlight won.


Was the Academy getting into the Fake News game with the wrong winner being announced, and did it have anything to do with the attacks on the Academy before last years Oscars of ignoring minorities?  While Moonlight was certainly good, there is something very suspicious about this kind of a major blunder in one of the most watched shows of the year and the most respected award show in the past.


Maybe it is time to drop the award shows since they all seem to be embroiled in politics and have lost their way as an entertainment medium.  I do not know of anyone who pays to see shows because of the politics of the actors and actresses and they seem to think being on the big screen acting gives them the right to act like the news media.


The choice between the two shows boiled down to Moonlight, a movie about growing up poor, Black and gay, or La La Land, "a musical with big numbers, intimate reveries and adult feelings, “La La Land” is a boy-meets-girl tale with early 21st-century rhythms (mostly good, even if its white stars are nestled, more self-consciously than naturally, in a multicultural world)" as Manohla Dargisn of The New York Times described it.


Box Office Receipts - La La Land $141 million - Moonlight $22.2 million


How about we let the public decide?  La La Land has earned nearly $141 million in domestic box office sales to date while Moonlight has earned $22.2 million.  I guess having six and a half times more receipts means nothing in terms of movie popularity.


Maybe Fake News is now here to stay and polarizing politics will destroy the movie industry as it did the news industry.  In the end it is the American public being played and that is not right!  Here is what other media had to say about the Oscar disaster.


Oscars Blows It: Gives Best Picture To Wrong Film; Chaos On Stage As ‘Moonlight’ Wins

16 minutes ago | Deadline | See recent Deadline news »
Moonlight won Best Picture after a complete mix-up on the stage in which Faye Dunaway read the wrong winner. It was thought that La La Land won to walk away with seven wins from its record-tying 14 nominations and producers Jordan Horowitz and Marc Platt even gave acceptance speeches before the mistake was discovered. It was a major upset for the top award of the night. Moonlight had gathered two awards — Best Supporting Actor for Mahershala Ali and Adapted Screenplay and… »
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Newswire: What the hell just happened?

19 minutes ago | avclub.com | See recent The AV Club news »
The Oscars made history tonight, though not exactly the kind of history it wanted to make. As Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway came out to present Best Picture, Beatty opened the envelope and took a lengthy pause before reading the winner—a pause that many, including Dunaway, took for some kind of tension-building/feeble old man shtick. And when he read the winner as La La Land, no one believed anything was amiss. Of course it was La La Land. This whole awards season, the narrative has been La La Land’s inevitable victory. And so, as the producers, cast, and crew came on stage to begin their well-rehearsed acceptance speeches, nothing seemed out of the ordinary.
But then Warren Beatty popped back in—always with the Warren Beatty—and suddenly it was evident something had gone very wrong.
“This is not a joke,” said producer Jordan Horowitz. “Moonlight, you »
- Sean O'Neal
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Oscars 2017 live: Beatty and Dunaway announce wrong best picture winner for La La Land – Moonlight wins

Follow the latest news from this year’s Academy Awards, with updates from the Hollywood ceremony, the acceptance speeches, red carpet hits and misses, and awards announcements for the best films, actors and actresses
Oscar winners 2017: the full list
Oscars red carpet 2017 – in pictures
5.28am GMT
Related: Moonlight wins best picture Oscar – after Warren Beatty reads out La La Land
5.27am GMT
As fantastic as it was to see Moonlight win, those poor La La Land guys who found out mid-speech that the win wasn’t theirs. They’re still dealing with that:
Heads are gonna roll. You couldn't have a worse possible f-up if you tried. Team Lll still consoling each other in theater. pic.twitter.com/UUr6dlKF9S
Continue reading »
- Benjamin Lee, Hannah Marriott and Ellie Violet Bramley
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Oscars 2017: The 21 Best, Worst and Most Uncomfortable Moments

23 minutes ago | TVLine.com | See recent TVLine.com news »
Denzel Washington officiating a wedding. Seth Rogen breaking into an impromptu Hamilton performance. Oh, and La La Land incorrectly being named Best Picture. Those were just a few of the truly bizarre things that took place at the 89th Annual Academy Awards.
VideosOscars: Jimmy Kimmel Shreds Trump, Mel Gibson in Monologue — Grade It!
Late-night funnyman Jimmy Kimmel managed to do a decent job as Oscars host — which, if you haven’t repressed all memories of James Franco and Anne Hathaway’s 2011 hosting stint, you’ll know is no small feat. Sure, we could’ve done without his tired banter with frenemy Matt Damon, »
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'Moonlight' wins best picture at dramatic Oscars 2017


In a shock finale to Sunday’s 89th Academy Awards, the drama was named best picture moments after La La Landhad been declared the winner in error.


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Thursday, February 23, 2017

Move over Trump it is time for the Oscars - The nominees and projected winners! The 89th Academy Awards!

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Oscar news

Oscar Nominations 2017: View the Complete List of Nominees


by Steve Dove


Welcome to the full list of nominations for the 2017 Oscars. Every nominee, every category, every detail you need is right here. What was nominated for Best Picture? Arrival, Fences, Hacksaw Ridge, Hell or High Water, Hidden Figures, La La Land, Lion, Manchester by the Sea and Moonlight all secured Best Picture nominations. The nominees for Actor in a Leading Role include Casey Affleck, Andrew Garfield, Ryan Gosling, Viggo Mortensen and Denzel Washington. For Actress in a Leading Role, Isabelle Huppert, Ruth Negga, Natalie Portman, Emma Stone and Meryl Streep were nominated. Check out the complete list of nominations below. Let the glitz, glamour and prestige begin!

 
Watch The Oscars LIVE!
OSCAR SUNDAY FEBRUARY 26 4pm on ABC.
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Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Casey Affleck, Manchester by the Sea
Andrew Garfield, Hacksaw Ridge
Ryan Gosling, La La Land
Viggo Mortensen, Captain Fantastic

Coltons Point Times Winner - Casey Affleck, Manchester by the Sea
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Ruth Negga, Loving
Natalie Portman, Jackie
Emma Stone, La La Land
Meryl Streep, Florence Foster Jenkins

Coltons Point Times Winner - Emma Stone, La La Land
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Mahershala Ali, Moonlight
Jeff Bridges, Hell or High Water
Lucas Hedges, Manchester by the Sea
Dev Patel, Lion
Michael Shannon, Nocturnal Animals

Coltons Point Times Winner - Mahershala Ali, Moonlight
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Viola Davis, Fences
Naomie Harris, Moonlight
Octavia Spencer, Hidden Figures
Michelle Williams, Manchester by the Sea

Coltons Point Times Winner - Viola Davis, Fences
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Coltons Point Times Winner - Zootopia
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Arrival
La La Land
Lion
Moonlight
Silence

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Allied
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Florence Foster Jenkins
Jackie
La La Land

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Arrival
Hacksaw Ridge
La La Land
Manchester by the Sea
Moonlight

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Fire at Sea
I Am Not Your Negro
Life, Animated
O.J.: Made in America
13th

Coltons Point Times Winner - O.J. Made in America
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Extremis
4.1 Miles
Joe’s Violin
Watani: My Homeland
The White Helmets

Coltons Point Times Winner - The White Helmets
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Arrival
Hacksaw Ridge
Hell or High Water
La La Land
Moonlight

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Land of Mine
A Man Called Ove
The Salesman
Tanna
Toni Erdmann

Coltons Point Times Winner - A Man Called Ove
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A Man Called Ove
Star Trek Beyond
Suicide Squad

Coltons Point Times Winner - Star Trek Beyond
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Jackie
La La Land
Lion
Moonlight
Passengers

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Music by Justin Hurwitz; Lyric by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul
Music and Lyric by Justin Timberlake, Max Martin and Karl Johan Schuster
"City Of Stars" from La La Land
Music by Justin Hurwitz; Lyric by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul
"The Empty Chair" from Jim: The James Foley Story
Music and Lyric by J. Ralph and Sting
"How Far I’ll Go" from Moana
Music and Lyric by Lin-Manuel Miranda

Coltons Point Times Winner - "City of Stars" from La La Land
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Arrival
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Hail, Caesar!
La La Land
Passengers

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Blind Vaysha
Borrowed Time
Pear Cider and Cigarettes
Pearl
Piper

Coltons Point Times Winner - Piper
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Ennemis Intérieurs
La Femme et le TGV
Silent Nights
Sing
Timecode

Coltons Point Times Winner - La Femme et le TGV
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Arrival
Deepwater Horizon
Hacksaw Ridge
La La Land
Sully

Coltons Point Times Winner - Hacksaw Ridge
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Arrival
Hacksaw Ridge
La La Land
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi

Coltons Point Times Winner - La La Land
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Deepwater Horizon
Doctor Strange
The Jungle Book
Kubo and the Two Strings
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Coltons Point Times Winner - The Jungle Book
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Arrival
Fences
Hidden Figures
Lion
Moonlight

Coltons Point Times Winner - Moonlight
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Hell or High Water
La La Land
The Lobster
Manchester by the Sea
20th Century Women

Coltons Point Times Winner - Manchester by the Sea 
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